Adetus analis ( Haldeman, 1847 )

Olivier, Renan Da Silva, Santos-Silva, Antonio, Monné, Marcela Laura & Costa-Pinto, Paula Jéssica, 2024, Notes, new records, and transference in South American Cerambycidae (Insecta, Coleoptera), Zootaxa 5496 (4), pp. 451-499 : 478-479

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5496.4.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:CAB6E914-24D3-4B84-96F8-0CCC2CEF5390

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13621437

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/EE1F3E45-5152-FFEF-70C8-F867FEDD6CD4

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Adetus analis ( Haldeman, 1847 )
status

 

Adetus analis ( Haldeman, 1847) View in CoL

( Fig. 52 View FIGURES 51–57 )

Polyopsia analis Haldeman, 1847: 55 View in CoL .

Adetus analis View in CoL ; LeConte, 1852: 161.

Agennopsis mutica Thomson, 1857b: 302 View in CoL .

Adetus muticus View in CoL ; Bates, 1872: 234 (syn.).

Agennopsis pygaea Bates, 1866: 295 View in CoL .

Adetus pygaeus View in CoL ; Gemminger, 1873: 3099.

Agennopsis mexicana Thomson, 1868c: 153 View in CoL .

Remarks. Polyopsia analis was described based on holotype from the United States of America (Pennsylvania). Thomson (1857b) described Agennopsis mutica based on a single specimen from Brazil. Bates (1866) described Agennopsis pygmaea based on syntypes male and female from Brazil (Pará, Rio de Janeiro). Finally, Thomson (1868c) described Agennopsis mexicana based on a single specimen from Mexico. Bates (1872) reported: “ Adetus muticus ( Agennopsis mutica, Thomson …).—Generally distributed throughout Tropical America . I can detect no important difference between specimens from Chontales, the Amazons, and Rio de Janeiro. Adetus analis, Leconte , = Polyopsia analis, Haldem. , which is stated by Leconte to be a South American insect, may possibly be this species. Agennopsis mexicana, Thoms. (Physis II. P. 153) is certainly the same.” “May possibly be” cannot be considered a formal synonymy but just a supposition. However, it is possible to conclude that Bates (1872) synonymized Agennopsis mexicana with Adetus muticus . Bates (1880) considered Agennopsis pygaea and Agennopsis mexicanus [sic] the same as Adetus muticus . Formally, Adetus muticus was never synonymized with A. analis . The former appears in the synonym of the latter from Chemsak et al. (1992), who only listed “ muticus ,” “ pygmaeus [sic],” and “ mexicana ” in the synonym of A. analis . They probably considered that Bates (1872) had made the formal synonymy.

Currently, it is known from the United States of America (the occurrence in this country needs to be confirmed or refuted after examination of the holotype), Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama, Colombia, Venezuela, French Guiana, Peru, Bolivia, Brazil (Pará, Maranhão, Bahia, Minas Gerais, Espírito Santo, Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, Paraná, Santa Catarina, Rio Grande do Sul), Argentina (Santiago del Estero) ( Monné 2024b; Tavakilian & Chevillotte 2023).

Material examined. BRAZIL, Mato Grosso do Sul (new state record): Campo Grande , CNPGC [Centro Nacional de Pesquisas de Gado de Corte—EMBRAPA], 1 female (MNRJ-ENT-47652), 06.XI.1976, W.W. Koller leg. ( MNRJ) .

MNRJ

Museu Nacional/Universidade Federal de Rio de Janeiro

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Coleoptera

Family

Cerambycidae

Genus

Adetus

Loc

Adetus analis ( Haldeman, 1847 )

Olivier, Renan Da Silva, Santos-Silva, Antonio, Monné, Marcela Laura & Costa-Pinto, Paula Jéssica 2024
2024
Loc

Adetus pygaeus

Gemminger, M. 1873: 3099
1873
Loc

Adetus muticus

Bates, H. W. 1872: 234
1872
Loc

Agennopsis mexicana

Thomson, J. 1868: 153
1868
Loc

Agennopsis pygaea

Bates, H. W. 1866: 295
1866
Loc

Agennopsis mutica Thomson, 1857b: 302

Thomson, J. 1857: 302
1857
Loc

Adetus analis

LeConte, J. L. 1852: 161
1852
Loc

Polyopsia analis

Haldeman, S. S. 1847: 55
1847
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